Events
- February 6 – Contralto Kathleen Ferrier, already terminally ill with cancer, leaves Covent Garden Opera House on a stretcher after being taken ill on the second night of her run in Gluck's Orfeo ed Euridice.
- February 11 – The Louisville Orchestra, conducted by the composer, premieres Carlos Chávez's Fourth Symphony (Sinfonía romántica).
- March 12 – Heinrich Sutermeister's opera Romeo and Juliet receives its first UK performance at Sadler's Wells Theatre in London, conducted by James Robertson.
- May 26 – Werner Meyer-Eppler, Fritz Enkel, Herbert Eimert, and Robert Beyer open a pioneering electronic music studio at the Cologne studios of the NWDR (Morawska-Büngeler 1988, 11–12).
- July 16–July 29 – The Internationale Ferienkurse für Neue Musik are held at Darmstadt.
- July 18 – Elvis Presley makes his first recordings.
- September 27 – Helen Traubel ends her long association with the Metropolitan Opera, after having appeared in Chicago as a night-club singer (Anon. 1953).
- October – Sir Arthur Bliss replaces Sir Arnold Bax as Master of the Queen's Music.
- October 5 – Wilhelm Furtwängler and the soloist's in the Vienna State Opera's production of Don Giovanni publicly protest the suspension of Egon Hilbert as administrator of the Burg Theater and State Opera.
- October 19 – Opening of the Covent Garden opera season, with a production of Wagner's Die Walküre.
- October 30 – Ernst Marboe is announced as the new administrator of the Vienna State Opera and Burg Theater, replacing Egon Hilbert.
- November 2 – the Metropolitan Opera announces that a new two-year contract has been agreed with the musicians' union, averting a threatened strike by the orchestra.
- November 17 – Carl Ebert is announced as the new Intendant of the Städtische Oper, (West) Berlin.
- December 7 – the La Scala opera season opens with a production of Alfredo Catalani's La Wally, to mark the hundredth anniversay of the composer's birth.
- Alfred Schnittke becomes a student of Evgeny Golubev.
- Frank Sinatra begins recording at Capitol.
- Frankie Laine sets the all-time United Kingdom record for weeks at Number One in a given year on the UK Singles Chart, when his hit singles "Answer Me," "Hey Joe!" and "I Believe" held the top slot for 27 weeks: a little over half a year. "I Believe," which was Number One for 18 weeks also holds the all-time record for a single. Over 50 years later, both records still hold.
- Eddie Fisher becomes "The Coca-Cola Kid" on the television show, Coke Time at a salary of one million dollars a year.
- The Platters form in Los Angeles.
- "Crazy Man, Crazy", recorded by Bill Haley & His Comets, becomes the first rock and roll single to make the Billboard national American musical charts.
- The Erato Records label is founded to promote French classical music.
[edit]Albums released
- Anita O'Day Collates – Anita O'Day
- Broadway's Best – Jo Stafford
- By the Light of the Silvery Moon – Doris Day
- Calamity Jane – Doris Day
- Country Girl – Bing Crosby
- Dean Martin Sings – Dean Martin
- Dinah Shore Sings the Blues – Dinah Shore
- Georgia Gibbs Sings Oldies – Georgia Gibbs
- Jazz at Massey Hall – The Quintet
- Kay Starr Style – Kay Starr
- May I Sing To You – Eddie Fisher
- New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm – Stan Kenton
- Portrait Of New Orleans – Jo Stafford and Frankie Laine
- Requested By You – Frank Sinatra
- Sinatra Sings His Greatest Hits – Frank Sinatra
- Some Fine Old Chestnuts – Bing Crosby
- Songs By Tom Lehrer – Tom Lehrer
- Songs of Open Spaces – Guy Mitchell
- Starring Jo Stafford – Jo Stafford
[edit]Biggest hit singles
The following singles achieved the highest chart positions in the limited set of charts available for 1953.
# | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart entries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Dean Martin | That's Amore | 1953 | US BB 1 of 1953, POP 1 of 1953, UK 2 – Jan 1954, US 1940s 2 – Nov 1953, RYM 2 of 1953, Scrobulate 47 of Italian, DDD 73 of 1953, Party 101 of 2007 | |
2 | Les Paul & Mary Ford | Vaya Con Dios (May God Be With You) | 1953 | US 1940s 1 – Jun 1953, US 1 for 11 weeks Aug 1953, Italy 2 of 1954, US BB 3 of 1953, POP 3 of 1953, UK 7 – Nov 1953, RYM 24 of 1953, Europe 97 of the 1950s | |
3 | Perry Como | Don't Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes | 1953 | UK 1 – Jan 1953, US 1940s 1 – Dec 1952, US 1 for 5 weeks Jan 1953, US BB 20 of 1953, POP 20 of 1953, RYM 31 of 1953 | |
4 | Eddie Fisher | I'm Walking Behind You | 1953 | UK 1 – May 1953, US 1940s 1 – May 1953, US 1 for 2 weeks Jul 1953, US BB 16 of 1953, POP 23 of 1953, RYM 119 of 1953 | |
5 | Hank Williams | Your Cheatin' Heart | 1953 | RYM 1 of 1953, DDD 2 of 1953, US BB 4 of 1953, POP 4 of 1953, RIAA 34, Scrobulate 87 of country, Rolling Stone 213, Acclaimed 286 |
[edit]US No. 1 hit singles
These singles reached the top of US Billboard magazine's charts in 1953.
First week | Number of weeks | Title | Artist |
---|---|---|---|
January 10, 1953 | 5 | "Don't Let The Stars Get In Your Eyes" | Perry Como |
February 14, 1953 | 5 | "Till I Waltz Again With You" | Teresa Brewer |
March 21, 1953 | 8 | "The Doggie in the Window" | Patti Page |
May 16, 1953 | 10 | "The Song from Moulin Rouge" | Percy Faith & his Orchestra |
July 25, 1953 | 2 | "I'm Walking Behind You" | Eddie Fisher |
August 8, 1953 | 9 | "Vaya con Dios" | Les Paul & Mary Ford |
October 10, 1953 | 4 | "St. George and the Dragonet" | Stan Freberg |
November 7, 1953 | 2 | "Vaya con Dios" | Les Paul & Mary Ford |
November 21, 1953 | 6 | "Rags to Riches" | Tony Bennett |
[edit]Top hits on record
- "Allez-Vous-En" – Kay Starr
- "Answer Me, O Lord" – Frankie Laine
- "Anywhere I Wander" – Julius La Rosa
- "April in Portugal", recorded by
- Les Baxter Orchestra
- Richard Hayman Orchestra
- Freddy Martin Orchestra
- Vic Damone
- "Bridge Of Sighs" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Bye Bye Blues" – Les Paul and Mary Ford
- "Changing Partners" – Patti Page
- "The Doggie in the Window" – Patti Page
- "Don't Let The Stars Get In Your Eyes" – Perry Como
- "Dragnet" – Ray Anthony
- "Eh Cumpari" – Julius LaRosa
- "Even Now" – Eddie Fisher
- "Floatin' Down To Cotton Town" – Frankie Laine & Jo Stafford
- "The Gang That Sang Heart Of My Heart" – The Four Aces featuring Al Alberts
- "Granada" – Frankie Laine
- "Half a Photograph" – Kay Starr
- "Have You Heard?" – Joni James
- "Hey Joe" – Frankie Laine
- "Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo" – Leslie Caron & Mel Ferrer
- "Home Lovin' Man" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Hound Dog" – Big Mama Thornton
- "I Believe" – Frankie Laine
- "I'm Walking Behind You" – Eddie Fisher
- "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" – The Four Lads
- "The Jones Boy" – The Mills Brothers
- "The Kid's Last Fight" – Frankie Laine
- "Look At That Girl" – Guy Mitchell
- "Make Her Mine" – Nat King Cole
- "Make Love to Me" – Jo Stafford
- "No Other Love" – Perry Como
- "Oh! My Pa-Pa" – Eddie Fisher
- "Outside of Heaven" – Eddie Fisher
- "Pretend" – Nat King Cole
- "Rags to Riches" – Tony Bennett
- "Ricochet" – Teresa Brewer
- "Same Old Saturday Night" – Frank Sinatra
- "Secret Love" – Doris Day
- "Seven Lonely Days" – Georgia Gibbs
- "Side by Side" – Kay Starr
- "The Song from Moulin Rouge" – Percy Faith (Felicia Sanders vocal)
- "Stranger in Paradise" – Tony Bennett
- "Tell Me a Story" – Frankie Laine & Jimmy Boyd
- "That's Amore" – Dean Martin
- "Three Coins in the Fountain" – Frank Sinatra
- "The Typewriter" – Leroy Anderson & His Orchestra
- "Vaya con Dios" – Les Paul and Mary Ford
- "Wishing Ring" – Joni James
- "Young at Heart" – Frank Sinatra
- "Your Cheatin' Heart", recorded by
[edit]Top R&B and Country hits on record
- "Big Foot May" – Hal Paige & His Blues Boys
- "Big Mamou Daddy – Carmen Taylor
- "The Clock" – Johnny Ace with the Beale Streeters
- "Crazy Man Crazy" – Bill Haley & His Comets
- "Crying In The Chapel" – The Orioles
- "Good Lovin' " – The Clovers
- "Hound Dog" – Big Mama Thornton
- "Let The Boogie Woogie Roll" – Clyde McPhatter
- "Mama (He Treats Your Daughter Mean)" – Ruth Brown
- "Mend Your Ways" – Ruth Brown
- "Mess Around" – Ray Charles
- "Please Don't Leave Me" – Fats Domino
- "Shake A Hand" – Faye Adams
- "Wild Wild Young Men" – Ruth Brown
- "Your Cheatin' Heart" – Hank Williams
[edit]Published popular music
- "And This Is My Beloved" w. & m. adapted Robert Wright & George Forrest
- "Angel Eyes" w. Earl Brent m. Matt Dennis
- "Anna" w.(Eng) William Engvick (Ital) F. Giordano m. R. Vatro
- "Answer Me, My Love" w. (Eng) Carl Sigman (Ger) & m. Gerhard Winkler & Fred Ravich
- "Baubles, Bangles And Beads" w. & m. adapt Robert Wright & George Forrest. Introduced by Doretta Morrow in the musical Kismet
- "Bell Bottom Blues" w. Hal David m. Leon Carr
- "Bimbo" w.m. Rodney Morris
- "Black Hills Of Dakota" w. Paul Francis Webster m. Sammy Fain. Introduced by Doris Day in the film Calamity Jane.
- "The Boy Friend" w.m. Sandy Wilson.
- "Can-Can" w.m. Cole Porter
- "Caribbean" w.m. Mitchell Torok
- "C'est Magnifique" w.m. Cole Porter. Introduced by Lilo and Peter Cookson in the musical Can-Can
- "Changing Partners" w. Joe Darion m. Larry Coleman
- "Chicka Boom" w.m. Bob Merrill
- "Crying In the Chapel" w.m. Artie Glenn
- "Cry Me a River" w.m. Arthur Hamilton
- "Dragnet" w.m. Walter Schumann
- "Ebb Tide" w. Carl Sigman m. Robert Maxwell
- "Eh, Cumpari!" trad Ital w. m. adapt. Julius LaRosa & Archie Bleyer
- "Ev'rybody Loves Saturday Night" Campbell
- "Fate" w. & m. adapt Robert Wright & George Forrest from music by Alexander Borodin Adapted from Symphony No. 2 in B Minor. It was introduced by Alfred Drake and Doretta Morrow in the musical Kismet.
- "From Here to Eternity" w. Robert Wells m. Fred Karger
- "Gambler's Guitar" w.m. Jim Lowe
- "Gee!" w.m. Viola Watkins, Daniel Norton & William Davis
- "Giddy-Up-A Ding Dong" w.m. Freddie Bell, Pep Lattanzi
- "Goodnite, Sweetheart, Goodnite" James Hudson, Calvin Carter
- "Half a Photograph" w. Bob Russell m. Hal Stanley
- "The Happy Wanderer" w.(Ger) Florenz Siegesmund & Edith Möller (Eng) Antonia Ridge m. Friedrich Wilhelm Möller
- "Here's That Rainy Day" w. Johnny Burke m. James Van Heusen. Introduced by John Raitt in the musical Carnival In Flanders.
- "Hold My Hand" w.m. Jack Lawrence & Richard Myers
- "I Believe" w.m. Ervin Drake, Jimmy Shirl, Irvin Graham & Al Stillman
- "(Oh Baby Mine) I Get So Lonely" w.m. Pat Ballard
- "I Love Paris" w.m. Cole Porter. Introduced by Lilo in the musical Can-Can
- "I Really Don't Want To Know" w. Howard Barnes m. Don Robertson
- "I'm Walking Behind You" w.m. Billy Reid
- "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" w. Jimmy Kennedy m. Nat Simon
- "It's All Right With Me" w.m. Cole Porter
- "It's Love" w. Betty Comden & Adolph Green m. Leonard Bernstein. Introduced by George Gaynes in the musical Wonderful Town. Performed in the 1955 London production by Dennis Bowen.
- "Just Walkin' In The Rain" w.m. Johnny Bragg & Robert S. Riley
- "Little Things Mean a Lot" w.m. Carl Stutz & Edith Lindeman
- "Look at That Girl" w.m. Bob Merrill
- "Make Love to Me" w. Alan Copeland & Bill Norvas Music from "Tin Roof Blues" 1923.
- "The Man That Got Away" w. Ira Gershwin m. Harold Arlen
- "The Man With The Banjo" w. (Eng) Robert Mellin m. Fritz Schulz Reichel
- "Marriage Type Love" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Richard Rodgers. Introduced by Arthur Maxwell and Helena Scott in the musical Me And Juliet.
- "Matilda, Matilda!" w.m. Harry Thomas
- "Melancholy Serenade" m. Jackie Gleason
- "Mexican Joe" w.m. Mitchell Torok
- "Money Burns a Hole In My Pocket" w. Bob Hilliard m. Jule Styne. Introduced by Dean Martin in the 1954 film Living It Up.
- "Money Honey" w.m. Jesse Stone
- "My Love, My Love" w. Bob Haymes m. Nick Acquaviva
- "No Other Love" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Richard Rodgers. Introduced by Isabel Bigley and Bill Hayes in the musical Me And Juliet.
- "Non Dimenticar" w.(Eng) Shelley Dobbins (Ital) Michele Galdieri m. P. G. Redi
- "Not Since Nineveh" w. & m. adapt Robert Wright & George Forrest From Borodin's "Polovetsian Dances".
- "Oh! My Pa-Pa" w. John Turner & Geoffrey Parsons m. Paul Burkhard
- "The Olive Tree" w. & m. adapt Robert Wright & George Forrest from music by Alexander Borodin
- "Rags to Riches" w.m. Richard Adler & Jerry Ross
- "Ricochet" w.m. Larry Coleman, Joe Darion & Norman Gimbel
- "Rock Around the Clock" w.m. Jimmy De Knight & Max C. Freedman
- "Santa Baby" w.m. Joan Javits, Phil Springer & Tony Springer
- "Satin Doll" w.m. Billy Strayhorn & Duke Ellington
- "Secret Love" w. Paul Francis Webster m. Sammy Fain. Introduced by Doris Day in the film Calamity Jane
- "Seven Lonely Days" w.m. Alden Shuman, Earl Shuman & Marshal Brown
- "Shake a Hand" w.m. Joe Morris
- "Sippin' Soda" adapt. P. Campbell
- "The Song From "Moulin Rouge"" (aka "Where Is Your Heart") w. (Eng) William Engvick (Fr) Jacques Larue m. Georges Auric
- "Stranger in Paradise" w. & m. adapt Robert Wright & George Forrest. Introduced by Doretta Morrow and Richard Kiley in the musical Kismet.
- "Such a Night" w.m. Lincoln Chase
- "Sway" ("Quien Será") w. (Eng) Norman Gimbel (Sp) Pablo Beltrán Ruiz m. Pablo Beltran Ruiz
- "Teach Me Tonight" w. Sammy Cahn m. Gene De Paul
- "Tell Me a Story" w.m. Terry Gilkyson
- "Tell Us Where the Good Times Are" w.m. Bob Merrill
- "That's Amore" w. Jack Brooks m. Harry Warren
- "Vaya con Dios" w.m. Larry Russell, Inez James & Buddy Pepper
- "Wanted" w.m. Jack Fulton & Lois Steele
- "When Love Goes Wrong" w. Harold Adamson m. Hoagy Carmichael from the film Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
- "You Won't Forget Me" w. Kermit Goell m. Fred Spielman Introduced by India Adams dubbing for Joan Crawford in the film Torch Song
- "You, You, You" w.(Eng) Robert Mellin (Ger) Walter Rothenberg m. Lotar Olias
- "Young at Heart" w. Carolyn Leigh m. Johnny Richards
[edit]Classical music
- Carlos Chávez –
- Symphony No. 4 (Sinfonía romántica)
- Symphony No. 5, for string orchestra
- George Crumb – Viola Sonata
- Peter Racine Fricker – Viola Concerto
- Cristobal Halffter – Piano Concerto
- Karl Amadeus Hartmann – Concerto for piano, winds and percussion
- György Ligeti – Sonata for Solo Cello
- Otto Luening – Fantasy in Space
- Xavier Montsalvatge – Poema Concertante
- Giacinto Scelsi – Five Incantations for piano
- Dmitri Shostakovich
- Ballet Suite No. 4
- Symphony No. 10 E minor, Op. 93
- Karlheinz Stockhausen -
- Kontra-Punkte
- Klavierstücke I–IV (revised version)
- Studie I, electronic music
- Ralph Vaughan Williams – Sinfonia antartica
- Heitor Villa-Lobos
- Harp Concerto
- Cello Concerto No. 2
[edit]Opera
- The Decembrists (Yuri Shaporin) first staged 23 June 1953 at the Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow.
- The Dumb Wife (Joseph Horovitz), premiered 21 November 1953 at the Guildhall School, London, by the Intimate Opera Company.
- Gloriana (Benjamin Britten) composed 1953, first performed on 8 July 1953 at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in the presence of Elizabeth II.
- Irmelin (Frederick Delius) composed 1890–92; first produced Oxford, 4 May 1953.
- Lenora 40/50 (Rolf Liebermann) first produced in Berlin on 12 February 1953 at the State Opera House in the British sector.
- Man of Enterprise (Denis Bloodworth) first produced on 8 December 1953 at Tiffin School, Kingston, Surrey, by the school operatic society.
- Menna (Arwel Hughes) premiered by the Welsh National Opera at the Pavilion in Cardiff on 9 November, with the composer conducting.
- Nelson (Lennox Berkeley), premiered in a concert performance 14 February 1953 by the English Opera Group at Wigmore Hall, London.
- Sevil (Fikrat Amirov)
- Three's Company (Antony Hopkins), premiered 21 November 1953 at the Guildhall School, London, by the Intimate Opera Company.
- The Tinners of Cornwall (Inglis Gundry), premiered 30 September 1953 at Rudolf Steiner Hall, conducted by Geoffrey Corbett.
[edit]Musical theater
- Airs On A Shoestring London revue opened at the Royal Court Theatre on April 22 and ran for 772 performances
- At The Lyric London production
- The Boy Friend (Sandy Wilson) commenced at London's Players Club on April 14 and reopened in an expanded version on October 13 before moving to the West End proper in 1954.
- Braziliana London production
- The Buccaneer London production
- Can-Can (Cole Porter) – Broadway production opened at the Shubert Theatre on May 7 and ran for 892 performances
- Hazel Flagg Broadway production opened at the Mark Hellinger Theatre on February 11 and ran for 190 performances
- John Brown's Body opened February 14
- John Murray Anderson's Almanac Broadway revue opened at the Imperial Theatre on December 10 and ran for 227 performances
- The King And I (Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II) London production opened at the Drury Lane Theatre on October 8 and ran for 926 performances
- Kismet Broadway production opened at the Ziegfeld Theatre on December 3 and ran for 583 performances
- Maggie Broadway production opened at the Royal National Theatre on February 18 and ran for 5 performances
- Me And Juliet Broadway production opened at the Majestic Theatre on May 28 and ran for 358 performances
- Paint Your Wagon (Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe) – London production opened at Her Majesty's Theatre on February 11 and ran for 477 performances
- The Wayward Way
- Wonderful Town (Leonard Bernstein, Betty Comden and Adolph Green) – Broadway production opened at the Winter Garden Theatre on February 25 and ran for 559 performances
[edit]Musical films
- The Affairs of Dobie Gillis starring Debbie Reynolds, Bobby Van, Barbara Ruick and Bob Fosse
- The Band Wagon
- By the Light of the Silvery Moon
- Calamity Jane starring Doris Day and Howard Keel
- The Desert Song
- The Farmer Takes a Wife starring Betty Grable, Dale Robertson, John Carroll, Thelma Ritter and Eddie Foy, Jr.
- Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
- I Love Melvin starring Debbie Reynolds and Donald O'Connor
- The Jazz Singer
- Kiss Me Kate starring Howard Keel, Kathryn Grayson, Ann Miller, Keenan Wynn and James Whitmore
- Lili
- Peter Pan animated feature
- Singin' in the Rain starring Gene Kelly, Donald O'Connor and Debbie Reynolds
- Small Town Girl starring Jane Powell, Ann Miller, Farley Granger, S. Z. Sakall, Bobby Van, Billie Burke, Fay Wray and featuring Nat "King" Cole. Directed by László Kardos.
- So This Is Love released July 15 starring Kathryn Grayson as Grace Moore.
- The Stooge released February 4 starring Martin and Lewis.
- Three Sailors and a Girl starring Jane Powell, Gordon MacRae and Gene Nelson
- Torch Song released October 23 starring Joan Crawford and Michael Wilding
[edit]Births
- January 6 – Malcolm Young (AC/DC)
- January 10 – Pat Benatar, singer
- January 23 – Robin Zander (Cheap Trick)
- January 26 – Lucinda Williams, singer
- January 29
- Louie Perez (Los Lobos)
- Teresa Teng, singer
- February 3 – Joëlle, singer (d. 1982)
- February 18 – Robin Bachman, drummer (Bachman–Turner Overdrive)
- February 20 – Riccardo Chailly, conductor
- February 26 – Michael Bolton, American singer
- March 3 – Robyn Hitchcock, singer-songwriter and guitarist
- March 12 – Ryan Paris, singer
- March 19 – Ricky Wilson (The B-52s)
- March 23 – Chaka Khan, singer
- March 31
- April 28 - Pat Donohue, guitarist for The Guys All-Star Shoe Band on A Prairie Home Companion)
- May 4 – Oleta Adams, American soul and jazz singer
- May 8
- May 9 – Kojo, singer
- May 15 – Mike Oldfield, composer & musician
- May 16 – Richard Page (Mr. Mister)
- May 17 – George Johnson (The Brothers Johnson)
- June 12 – Rocky Burnette, rock singer
- June 19 – Larry Dunn (Earth Wind & Fire)
- June 20
- Alan Longmuir (The Bay City Rollers)
- Dušan Rapoš, composer
- June 22 – Cyndi Lauper, singer-songwriter
- June 29 – Colin Hay (Men at Work)
- July 6 – Nanci Griffith, singer
- July 21 – Eric Bazilian (The Hooters)
- July 29 – Geddy Lee (Rush)
- July 31 – Hugh MacDowell (Electric Light Orchestra)
- August 1 – Robert Cray, blues guitarist and singer
- August 12 – Peter Ostroushko, mandolinist, fiddler
- August 16 – James "J.T." Taylor (Kool & the Gang)
- August 17 – Kevin Rowland, vocalist (Dexys Midnight Runners)
- August 24 – Ron Holloway, tenor saxophonist
- August 27 – Alex Lifeson (Rush)
- August 29 – Rick Downey (Blue Öyster Cult)
- September 2 – John Zorn, composer
- September 7 – Benmont Tench, keyboardist for Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers and others
- September 11 – Tommy Shaw, Styx
- September 27 – Greg Ham, Men at Work
- October 7 – Tico Torres, Bon Jovi
- October 10- Midge Ure, singer and songwriter
- October 14 – Kazumi Watanabe, jazz performer
- October 15 – Tito Jackson (The Jackson 5)
- October 16- Tony Carey (Rainbow)
- October 21 – Charlotte Caffey (The Go-Go's)
- October 26 – Keith Strickland (The B-52s)
- October 31 – Johnny Clegg, singer and instrumentalist
- November 11 – Andy Partridge (XTC)
- November 13
- Andrew Ranken, The Pogues
- Keith Green, gospel singer/songwriter (d. 1982)
- November 22 – Urmas Alender, singer (Ruja, Propeller)
[edit]Deaths
- January 1 – Hank Williams, country musician, 29
- January 18 – Arthur Wood, composer, 78
- February 2 – Gustav Strube, conductor and composer, 75
- March 5
- Sergei Prokofiev, composer, 61
- E. T. Cook, organist and composer, 72
- March 19 – Irène Bordoni, singer and actress, 68
- March 29 – Arthur Fields, singer and songwriter, 64
- April 23 – Peter DeRose, Tin Pan Alley composer, 53
- April 29 – Kiki, "The Queen of Montparnasse", 51 (drug- and alcohol-related)
- April 30 – Lily Brayton, musical theatre star, 76
- May 15 – Mabel Love, dancer, 78
- May 16 – Django Reinhardt, jazz guitarist, 43 (brain hemorrhage)
- May 30 – Dooley Wilson, actor, singer and pianist, 67
- June 10 – Grzegorz Fitelberg, conductor, violinist and composer, 73
- June 25 – Jules Van Nuffel, musicologist and composer, 70
- July 5 – Titta Ruffo, operatic baritone, 76
- August 14 – Friedrich Schorr, operatic bass-baritone, 64
- August 29 – Darrell Fancourt, bass-baritone, 67
- September 1 – Jacques Thibaud, violinist, 72
- September 21 – Roger Quilter, composer, 75
- October 3 – Sir Arnold Bax, composer, 69
- October 8 – Kathleen Ferrier, English contralto, 41 (cancer)
- October 18 – Marguerite d'Alvarez, operatic contralto, exact age unknown
- October 27 – Eduard Künneke, composer, 68
- November 10 – Theodora Morse, lyricist, 70
- November 18 – Ruth Crawford Seeger, composer, 52
- November 21 – Larry Shields, jazz musician, 60
- November 26 – Ivor Atkins, organist and choirmaster, 83
- December 5
- Noel Mewton-Wood, pianist, 31 (suicide by poisoning)
- Jorge Negrete, singer and actor, 42 (hepatitis)
- December 9 – Issay Dobrowen, pianist, conductor and composer, 62
- December 11 – Albert Coates, conductor and composer, 71
- December 29 – Violet MacMillan, Broadway star, 66
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